Susan Lagerman v. Arizona State Retirement System ( 2020 )


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  •                                  IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
    SUSAN LAGERMAN,
    Plaintiff/Appellant,
    v.
    ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM,
    Defendant/Appellee.
    No. CV-19-0101-PR
    Filed May 14, 2020
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    The Honorable Patricia A. Starr, Judge
    No. LC2017-000102-001
    AFFIRMED
    Opinion of the Court of Appeals, Division One
    
    246 Ariz. 270
    (App. 2019)
    AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED IN PART
    COUNSEL:
    J. Alex Grimsley (argued), Dickinson Wright PLLC, Phoenix; and Thomas
    Griffin, Robaina & Kresin PLLC, Phoenix, Attorneys for Susan Lagerman
    Mark Brnovich, Arizona Attorney General, Kathleen P. Sweeney, Senior
    Appellate Counsel, Phoenix; and Timothy J. Berg (argued), Ryan C. Curtis,
    Fennemore Craig, P.C., Phoenix, Attorneys for Arizona State Retirement
    System
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    JUSTICE MONTGOMERY authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    CHIEF JUSTICE BRUTINEL, VICE CHIEF JUSTICE TIMMER and
    JUSTICES BOLICK, GOULD, LOPEZ, and PELANDER (RETIRED) 1 joined.
    JUSTICE MONTGOMERY, opinion of the Court:
    ¶1           This case involves two distinct yet interrelated issues
    concerning the administration of the Arizona State Retirement System
    (“ASRS”). 2 First, we consider whether requiring submittal of a retirement
    application pursuant to A.R.S. § 38-757(A) as a condition for receiving
    retirement benefits violates article 29, section 1(D) of the Arizona
    Constitution, which prohibits the diminishment or impairment of public
    retirement system benefits. Second, we determine whether all the
    conditions for electing a retirement date set forth in A.R.S. § 38-764(A)
    must be satisfied or if meeting any one may suffice.
    ¶2            We hold that the requirement to submit a retirement
    application for receipt of retirement benefits pursuant to § 38-757(A) does
    not violate article 29, section 1(D), and that all conditions listed in § 38-
    764(A) must be satisfied in order to elect a retirement date under the Plan.
    I.
    ¶3            Susan Lagerman began her Plan-qualified employment as a
    securities examiner with the Arizona Corporation Commission in 1978. She
    continued in the Plan as an attorney with the Arizona Attorney General’s
    1 Justice James P. Beene has recused himself from this case. Pursuant to
    article 6, section 3 of the Arizona Constitution, the Honorable John
    Pelander, Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court (Retired), was designated
    to sit in this matter.
    2 Arizona statutes use “ASRS” when referring to both the retirement plan
    and the agency administering that plan. To avoid any confusion, we use
    ”Agency” when referring to ASRS personnel and their actions and use
    “Plan” when referring to the retirement plan.
    2
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    Office from 1981 to February 17, 2003. She became eligible for a normal
    retirement on July 23, 2005. 3
    ¶4             On April 6, 2016, Lagerman submitted an application for
    retirement, listing July 23, 2005 as her date for commencing retirement. The
    Agency rejected the July 23 date as her retirement date and instead used the
    April 6 date. The financial consequence of the Agency’s decision to
    Lagerman is significant. The benefit payments between the 2005 date and
    the date she submitted her application in 2016 is approximately $220,000.
    ¶5            Lagerman unsuccessfully appealed the Agency’s decision to
    the Agency Assistant Director and then to the Director. She then appealed
    the decision to the Office of Administrative Hearings and argued that the
    plain language of § 38-764(A) permitted her to choose July 23, 2005 as her
    retirement commencement date. Throughout, the Agency maintained that
    § 38-764(A) requires a retiring member to choose a date for commencing
    retirement that is not earlier than the day following termination of
    employment and not earlier than the date of submission of a retirement
    application. The administrative law judge recommended affirming the
    determination that Lagerman’s retirement date was April 6, 2016, and the
    Agency Appeals Committee accepted that recommendation.
    ¶6           Lagerman then sought judicial review in superior court
    pursuant to the Administrative Review Act. A.R.S. § 12-901, et seq. The
    court affirmed the Agency’s decision.
    ¶7            Lagerman appealed, and the court of appeals affirmed the
    superior court. Lagerman v. Ariz. State Ret. Sys., 
    246 Ariz. 270
    , 272 ¶ 2 (App.
    2019). The court rejected her interpretation of § 38-764(A), concluding that
    the statute precludes electing a retirement date before the Agency receives
    a retirement application and that such a result does not diminish or impair
    3“Normal retirement” for members who began work before July 1, 2011 can
    occur when a Plan member reaches age sixty-two with ten years of service,
    reaches age sixty-five, or, as in Lagerman’s case, when a member’s
    combined age and years of service equals eighty. See A.R.S. § 38-711(27)(a).
    3
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    her benefits in violation of § 38-757(A) or article 29, section 1(D) of the
    Arizona Constitution. See
    id. ¶8 We
    granted review because the terms and conditions for
    beginning retirement and the receipt of retirement benefits under the Plan
    are legal issues of first impression with statewide importance. We have
    jurisdiction under article 6, section 5(3) of the Arizona Constitution.
    II.
    ¶9            The Plan is a defined benefit plan that provides retirement
    benefits to employees of the State of Arizona and employees of
    participating political subdivisions. See A.R.S. §§ 38-711(13), -711(23), and
    -712(B). Public employees in Arizona are required to participate if they are
    working at least twenty hours each week for at least twenty weeks in a fiscal
    year with a participating Plan employer. A.R.S. §§ 38-736(A), -711(23)(b).
    ¶10           There are three categories of Plan members: active, inactive,
    and retired. Active members contribute to the Plan and work the required
    hours for membership. See A.R.S. § 38-711(1), -711(23)(b). Inactive
    members are those who previously made contributions to the Plan but are
    not currently contributing, are not eligible for active membership, and have
    not withdrawn their contributions or begun receiving retirement benefits.
    A.R.S. § 38-711(16). Retired members are currently receiving Plan
    retirement benefits. A.R.S. § 38-711(30).
    ¶11           Plan members do not necessarily retire when they end
    employment. There are several possible post-employment scenarios. First,
    when members terminate employment, they can seek a return of their own
    contributions plus those of the employer, if applicable, with interest. A.R.S.
    § 38-740. Second, members can terminate employment and simply leave
    their contributions with the Plan where their contributions, along with a
    percentage of the employer’s contributions based on years of service, plus
    any interest may be returned to the member at a later date or used as a
    survivor benefit payable to a designated beneficiary following the
    member’s death. A.R.S. §§ 38-740, -762. Third, members may later return
    to employment with a Plan employer and resume making contributions.
    4
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    A.R.S. § 38-766. Finally, members may choose to retire when they reach
    their normal retirement date. See A.R.S. § 38-711(27).
    III.
    ¶12            Lagerman contends that her right to a retirement benefit was
    unconditional and nonforfeitable as of her July 23, 2005 retirement date
    pursuant to § 38-757(A). Thus, she claims that her right to collect retirement
    benefits was not contingent on submitting a retirement application, which
    she insists is just a procedural step. Therefore, any delay in initiating
    payment of her monthly benefit—regardless of when she submitted a
    retirement application—requires either a lump sum payment with interest
    or an increase in future payments to account for benefits not paid in the
    interim. Otherwise, she asserts, the failure to account for amounts not paid
    diminishes or impairs her benefits contrary to article 29, section 1(D) of the
    Arizona Constitution. Lagerman additionally argues that § 38-764(A)
    permits her to elect a retirement date that satisfies any of the conditions
    listed therein.
    ¶13             We review de novo an administrative decision based on an
    interpretation of law. See A.R.S. § 12–910(E); see also Forest Guardians v.
    Wells, 
    201 Ariz. 255
    , 259 ¶ 9 (2001). “If a statute is subject to only one
    reasonable interpretation, we apply it without further analysis.” Glazer v.
    State, 
    237 Ariz. 160
    , 163 ¶ 12 (2015). Statutes that address the same subject
    or general purpose “should be read together and harmonized when
    possible.” David C. v. Alexis S., 
    240 Ariz. 53
    , 55 ¶ 9 (2016). “[I]f possible this
    court construes statutes to avoid rendering them unconstitutional.” Hayes
    v. Cont’l Ins. Co., 
    178 Ariz. 264
    , 272 (1994).
    A.
    ¶14           Arizona Revised Statutes § 38-757 provides:
    A. After application on a form prescribed by the director, a
    member may retire on reaching the member’s normal
    retirement date. Except as provided in § 13-713, a member’s
    right to the member’s normal retirement benefit as described
    in subsection B of this section is nonforfeitable by an employer
    5
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    or ASRS on attainment of the member’s normal retirement
    date.
    B. Except as provided in § 38-768, a member who meets the
    requirements for retirement benefits at normal retirement
    shall receive a monthly life annuity . . . .
    ....
    ¶15           Reading subsections (A) and (B) together, as the reference to
    subsection (B) in subsection (A) necessarily requires, it is clear that a
    member shall receive a monthly annuity payment after applying on the
    prescribed form and reaching the normal retirement date. The fact that a
    Plan member’s right to a normal retirement benefit is nonforfeitable as of
    the normal retirement date, except as provided in § 13-713, 4 does not
    eliminate the statutory requirements a member must satisfy in order to
    receive the benefit. Before submitting an application and attaining a normal
    retirement date, a member is not entitled to receive retirement benefits. The
    statute, by its terms, renders submitting a retirement application a
    substantive condition precedent for receiving retirement benefits; the
    application is not just a procedural step.
    ¶16             In Hall v. Elected Officials’ Retirement Plan, we surveyed
    previous cases involving pension rights to conclude that “a public
    employee’s interest in a retirement benefit or pension becomes a right or
    entitlement at the outset of employment, but the right to begin collecting
    pension benefits is contingent upon completing the requirements for
    retirement eligibility.” 
    241 Ariz. 33
    , 44 ¶ 33 (2016) (citing Fields v. Elected
    Officials’ Ret. Plan, 
    234 Ariz. 214
    , 221 ¶ 31 (2014) (providing that although
    the right to receive a pension “vest[s] upon acceptance of employment,” the
    pension is “subject to conditions precedent, such as completing the term of
    employment”) and Krucker v. Goddard, 
    99 Ariz. 227
    , 230 (1965) (providing
    that a plan member’s right to withdraw contributions vested because he
    “had fulfilled every condition precedent to having his contributions
    returned”)).
    4 The legislature added § 13-713 in 2011, providing for forfeiture of rights
    and benefits under the Plan in the event a Plan member is convicted of
    certain felonies committed in the course of public employment.
    6
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶17           Consequently, although Lagerman’s right to retirement
    benefits was nonforfeitable as of July 23, 2005, the Plan was not obligated
    to pay her until she satisfied all the requirements to receive benefits by
    submitting her retirement application on April 6, 2016. Because the Plan
    has paid her a monthly benefit after she complied with the provisions of
    § 38-757, no diminishment or impairment of her benefits has occurred in
    violation of article 29, section 1(D) of the Arizona Constitution.
    1.
    ¶18            Lagerman’s assertion that the nonforfeitability language in
    § 38-757(A) requires the Plan to pay her benefits as of her normal retirement
    date, regardless of when she submits a retirement application, is
    inconsistent with other provisions governing the Plan. Only two sections
    make allowance for a retroactive payment of benefits. When a change or
    error in Agency records results in a member receiving less than the correct
    amount, A.R.S. § 38-765 requires the Agency to “correct the error and as far
    as practicable . . . adjust the payments in a manner so that the actuarial
    equivalent of the benefit to which the member or beneficiary was correctly
    entitled is paid.” And A.R.S. § 38-715(D)(4) authorizes the Agency director,
    with the approval of the Agency board, to “[m]ake retirement under this
    article effective retroactively to on or after the day following the date
    employment is terminated if the member was unable to apply before the
    retroactive effective date through no fault of the member.” Neither
    circumstance is before us. 5 Finally, the methodology used to determine the
    annual value of the Plan as required by A.R.S. § 38-714 is not structured to
    account for liabilities based on mere attainment of a normal retirement date.
    See ASRS 2019 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, 98
    https://www.azasrs.gov/sites/default/files/2019_ASRS_CAFR_Web.pdf.
    Instead, the methodology takes into account retirements. See
    id. 5 Although
    Lagerman raised the issue of a retroactive retirement pursuant
    to § 38-715(D)(4) before the court of appeals, she did not raise it in her
    petition to this Court.
    7
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    2.
    ¶19          Requiring the submission of a retirement application as a
    condition for receiving benefits accords with other statutory provisions
    governing the administration of the Plan. For example, at retirement, a
    member must provide the Agency with information regarding the type of
    benefit payment the member wants to receive, the identity and age of the
    member’s designated beneficiary, the member’s choice of health care
    options, and any required spouse information. See A.R.S. §§ 38-758, -760,
    and -776.
    ¶20             Retiring members can choose to receive their retirement
    benefit as a joint and survivor annuity, a period-certain annuity, a straight
    life annuity, or take a lump sum at the time of retirement and thereafter
    receive a life annuity. A.R.S. § 38-760(B). In the case of a joint and survivor
    or period-certain annuity, members must have designated a beneficiary.
    See
    id. In either
    instance, the monthly benefit payment is modified based
    on the ages of the retiring member and the designated beneficiary at the
    time of retirement. Ariz. Admin. Code R8-2-126(F). For Lagerman, a
    straight life annuity monthly benefit would have been $1,930.09, while a
    joint and survivor annuity, which she chose, is $1,708.32. Members also
    have options regarding whether and how to participate in health insurance
    options for themselves or their family as provided by the Plan. A.R.S. §§
    38-782, -783. Lastly, if a member is married at the time of retirement, the
    spouse must be named as a contingent annuitant or the spouse must waive
    the designation. A.R.S. § 38-760(C), -776. Failure to name a spouse or
    submit a waiver from a spouse will result in the Plan cancelling the
    member’s retirement and the member will have to reapply. A.R.S. § 38-
    760(C).
    ¶21            The retirement application thus also provides necessary
    information for the Plan to administer benefits to retiring members.
    Without the information provided with the application, the Plan would not
    be able to calculate the proper payment for a member’s monthly retirement
    benefit, provide the elected health care benefits, identify beneficiaries for
    calculating any payment modifications, or know who to make benefit
    payments to upon the retired member’s death. Furthermore, until
    Lagerman chose the type of annuity she wanted to receive and designated
    8
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    her beneficiary at the time of her actual retirement, the Agency could not
    have determined its liability for Lagerman’s retirement benefit.
    B.
    ¶22            Lagerman points out that the Arizona Legislature amended
    § 38-757(A) in 2013, adding the second sentence referencing § 13-713 and
    the nonforfeitability language. She characterizes this amendment as
    evidencing the legislature’s intent to conform the Plan to federal law
    regarding nonforfeitability because it bore the heading “Federal
    Conforming Changes” in the accompanying Senate Fact Sheet. See Ariz.
    State Senate Final Amended Fact Sheet for S.B. 1170, 51st Leg., 1st Reg. Sess.
    (Jul. 11, 2013). Lagerman notes that this nonforfeitability language tracks
    similar language in 26 U.S.C. § 411(a) 6 of the Internal Revenue Code, 29
    U.S.C. § 1053(a) 7 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
    (“ERISA”), and 26 C.F.R. § 1-411(a). 8 Lagerman thus concludes that federal
    pension law and federal cases addressing nonforfeitability in pension
    benefits are equally applicable to § 38-757(A).
    ¶23           However, as “a plan established and maintained for its
    employees . . . by the government of [Arizona],” the Plan is a government
    plan. See 26 U.S.C. § 414(d); see also 29 U.S.C. § 1002(32); and A.R.S. § 38-
    712. Therefore, the Plan is exempt from the provisions of ERISA. See 29
    U.S.C. § 1003(b)(1) (“The provisions of [ERISA] shall not apply to any
    employee benefit plan if such plan is a governmental plan . . . .”). The Plan
    is also generally exempt from 26 U.S.C. § 411, except for the need to meet
    minimum vesting requirements. See 26 U.S.C. § 411(e).
    6 “A trust shall not constitute a qualified trust under section 401(a) unless
    the plan . . . provides that an employee's right to his normal retirement
    benefit is nonforfeitable upon the attainment of normal retirement
    age . . . .”
    7 “Each pension plan shall provide that an employee's right to his normal
    retirement benefit is nonforfeitable upon the attainment of normal
    retirement age . . . .”
    8 “A plan is not a qualified plan . . . unless—The plan provides that an
    employee's right to his normal retirement benefit . . . is nonforfeitable . . .
    upon and after the attainment of normal retirement age.”
    9
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    1.
    ¶24            Even if Lagerman were correct that the legislature intended
    to conform the Plan to federal pension law concerning the nonforfeitability
    of pension benefits, her conclusion that § 38-757(A) requires the Plan to pay
    her retirement benefits beginning on July 23, 2005 is incorrect. The cases
    she cites interpreting ERISA, though not controlling, are consistent with the
    Agency’s administration of retirement under the Plan.
    ¶25            The facts of Contilli v. Local 705 International Brotherhood of
    Teamsters Pension Fund help illustrate the difference between attaining a
    normal retirement age and actually retiring for purposes of receiving
    retirement benefits. 
    559 F.3d 720
    (7th Cir. 2009). There, the plaintiff reached
    normal retirement age when he turned 65 on August 30, 1995, but he did
    not actually retire until October 1997.
    Id. at 721.
    The plaintiff then applied
    for retirement benefits in January 1998 and began receiving benefits in
    February.
    Id. At issue
    was the plan’s failure to pay benefits as of the date
    he retired and to make an actuarial adjustment to account for the time
    between his retirement in October and when he began receiving his pension
    in February.
    Id. at 722.
    The court reviewed the distinction between being
    eligible for retirement and actually retiring when considering the need for
    an actuarial adjustment for any delay in paying benefits and explained:
    There is an exception to the actuarial-adjustment requirement
    for a participant who puts off retirement while continuing to
    work. See 29 U.S.C. § 1053(a)(3)(B). So the Fund was entitled
    to start Contilli’s pension in November 1997, when he retired,
    rather than in September 1995, the month after his 65th
    birthday; it did not need to send him catch-up checks for those
    two years or make any adjustment other than what the plan
    itself required . . . . But once Contilli retired his entitlement
    was fixed, and the Fund’s failure to pay any month’s benefit
    worked a forfeiture of that amount.
    Id.; see also Cotter v. Eastern Conference of Teamsters Retirement Plan, 
    898 F.2d 424
    , 426 (4th Cir. 1990) (noting difference between eligibility for benefits
    and entitlement to receive benefits).
    10
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶26           Like the Fund in Contilli, the Agency is not obligated to pay
    Lagerman “catch-up checks” or to make an actuarial adjustment to account
    for the time between her normal retirement date and the date on which she
    submitted her retirement application and actually retired. Instead, the
    Agency was required to pay—and has paid—Lagerman the amount of her
    retirement benefit she had a nonforfeitable right to and that was “fixed” as
    of her retirement date, April 6, 2016.
    2.
    ¶27             In the other case cited by Lagerman, Canseco v. Construction
    Laborers Pension Trust for Southern California, 
    93 F.3d 600
    (9th Cir. 1996), the
    court considered whether a retirement application was in fact a condition
    for eligibility to receive retirement benefits. The Canseco court highlighted
    the fact that the structure of the plan addressed retirement eligibility and
    applying for benefits separately in different sections, stating:
    Finally, the structure of the [] plan reinforces our conclusion
    that the plan does not require an application as a condition of
    eligibility. Article 2 and Article 5 cover separate provisions of
    the plan: Article 2 governs “Eligibility for Retirement
    Benefits,” while Article 5 governs “Payment of Benefits.” The
    separation of these provisions into different articles . . .
    indicates that eligibility for retirement benefits is wholly
    independent from the payment of those benefits.
    Id. at 607.
    ¶28            Unlike the plan in Canseco, the requirements for normal
    retirement for Lagerman are set forth in one place in § 38-757, which
    explicitly states that “[a]fter application . . . a member may retire on reaching
    the member’s normal retirement date.” § 38-757(A) (emphasis added). The
    requirement to submit a retirement application and being eligible for
    retirement are inextricable conditions precedent to eligibility for receipt of
    Plan retirement benefits.
    11
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    C.
    ¶29           With respect to commencing retirement, § 38-764 provides:
    A. Retirement is deemed to commence on a date elected by
    the member. That date shall not be earlier than the day
    following the date of termination of employment, the date
    ASRS receives the member’s completed retirement
    application or the date specified by the member pursuant to
    subsection I of this section.
    ....
    I. A member who attains a normal retirement date may retire
    at any time without terminating employment if the member
    is employed for less than the hours required for active
    membership pursuant to § 38-711, paragraph 23, subdivision
    (b).
    ¶30            Lagerman contends that “or” in subsection (A) is used in the
    disjunctive, permitting her to elect a retirement date for any of the three
    events listed. Accordingly, she could elect a date that is not earlier than the
    day following the date she terminated employment, or the date the Agency
    received her completed retirement application, or the date she specified
    pursuant to subsection (I). Therefore, she could submit a retirement
    application in 2016 with an effective retirement date in 2005. We disagree.
    ¶31            The consequence of a negative phrase—“shall not be earlier
    than”—preceding “or” in subsection (A) is that the conditions listed are
    each prohibited. See Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The
    Interpretation of Legal Texts 119 (2012) (addressing the singular negation-
    effect that occurs when a disjunctive “or” is preceded by “not” to prohibit
    any and all items in a list); see also Schane v. International Brotherhood of
    Teamsters Union Local No. 710 Pension Fund Pension Plan, 
    760 F.3d 585
    , 589
    (7th Cir. 2014) (illustrating “that not (X or Y) is equivalent to not X and not
    Y” (emphasis omitted)). Thus, § 38-764(A) requires a member to elect a
    retirement date that is not earlier than the day following her termination of
    employment, not earlier than the date of receipt of her retirement
    application, and not earlier than the date on which she specifies pursuant to
    § 38-764(I).
    12
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶32            The statute’s history supports this interpretation as well.
    Before the 1999 amendments that added subsection (I) to § 38-764 and the
    reference to (I) in subsection (A), § 38-764(A) read “[r]etirement is deemed
    to commence on a date elected by the member. That date shall not be earlier
    than the day following the date of termination of employment or the date
    ASRS receives the member’s completed retirement application.” Applying
    the singular-negation effect to the pre-1999 version of § 38-764(A), with the
    same occurrence of “or” preceded by a negative, yields the same result. A
    member was required to elect a retirement date that was not earlier than the
    date the member terminated employment and not earlier than the date the
    member submitted a completed retirement application.
    ¶33            There is no evidence the legislature sought to alter the
    conditions for electing a retirement date when it amended the statute in
    1999. Both the Senate Fact Sheet and House Bill Summary for the
    amendments characterized the changes as “[c]larif[ying] that a member
    who has attained a normal retirement date but continues to work less than
    the hours required for active ASRS membership may do so without
    interrupting that member’s retirement pension.” Ariz. State Senate Fact
    Sheet for S.B. 1083, 44th Leg., 1st Reg. Sess. (May 27, 1999); Ariz. State House
    Bill Summary for S.B. 1083, 44th Leg., 1st Reg. Sess. (Mar. 25, 1999).
    ¶34            Lagerman further asserts that if “or” is read in this manner, it
    creates a conflict between subsections (A) and (I). Specifically, she points
    out that a member who elects to retire but continues in employment under
    (I) necessarily retires “earlier than the day following the date of termination
    of employment,” which is not permitted by the first clause in the second
    sentence of (A). However, the conflict she identifies is resolved by reading
    (A) and (I) together, as the reference to (I) in subsection (A) requires, with
    other provisions governing active membership in the Plan.
    ¶35          “When possible, we seek to harmonize statutory provisions
    and avoid interpretations that result in contradictory provisions.” Premier
    Physicians Grp., PLLC v. Navarro, 
    240 Ariz. 193
    , 195 ¶ 9 (2016). The first
    clause of the second sentence in (A) contemplates an active member’s
    termination of employment with a Plan employer. The consequence of
    13
    SUSAN LAGERMAN V. ARIZONA STATE RETIREMENT SYSTEM
    Opinion of the Court
    ceasing employment is that the member is no longer working and therefore
    is not an active member, as referenced in subsection (I). The third clause of
    the second sentence in (A) applies to an active member who elects to retire
    but also elects to continue working under the option offered by subsection
    (I). Subsection (I) specifically provides that members selecting this option
    must end active membership by working “less than the hours required for
    active membership pursuant to § 38-711, paragraph 23, subdivision (b).”
    Read together then, both (A) and (I) require a member to cease working the
    hours that would qualify a member for active membership in the Plan as a
    condition for electing a retirement date. That the member must choose how
    to comply with this condition—terminating employment or working fewer
    hours than required for active membership—does not constitute a conflict
    between subsections (A) and (I).
    IV.
    ¶36           Because the Plan processed Lagerman’s retirement date as
    provided for in statute and calculated her chosen monthly life annuity
    benefit as required, the Plan complied with § 38-757(A), and no forfeiture,
    diminishment or impairment of Lagerman’s normal retirement benefits
    occurred in violation of article 29, section 1(D) of the Arizona Constitution.
    ¶37           Section 38-764(A) requires a member to elect a date for
    retirement that follows termination of active membership in the Plan and
    submission of a completed retirement application. Therefore, Lagerman’s
    effective date of retirement is April 6, 2016.
    ¶38           Because she is not the prevailing party, we deny Lagerman’s
    request for attorney fees.
    V.
    ¶39          We affirm the trial court’s judgment. We vacate all but ¶¶ 19-
    24 of the court of appeals’ opinion but affirm that court’s conclusion and
    result.
    14